England hopes rest on Joe Root with New Zealand five wickets from victory in Oval Test | Cricket News

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England’s hopes of avoiding defeat in the second Test rest on the shoulders of stand-in captain Joe Root, with New Zealand closing in on a series-levelling victory at The Kia Oval.

On the day he became the second player in history to reach 14,000 Test runs, Root (75 not out) saw England through to stumps on 182-5 alongside Jordan Cox – who is yet to score – with the hosts 281 runs away from an improbable victory.

Early wickets looked to have hampered an already daunting record chase of 463 before Harry Brook (58 off 54) and Root posted half-centuries after tea in a stand of 97 for the third wicket that had England daring to dream.

But the Black Caps landed telling blows in a captivating evening session, with Matt Henry dismissing Brook after he and Root had been spared by technology, before James Rew (15) fell lbw to Kyle Jamieson (3-37) following a superb review.

The odds remain stacked against England, with New Zealand just five wickets from victory, but with Root at the crease, hope – however slim – remains that the unlikeliest of results is still possible.

Score summary – England vs New Zealand, second Test, The Kia Oval

New Zealand 391 all out in 96.2 overs in first innings (put in to bat): Glenn Phillips (100), Tom Blundell (51); Jacob Bethell (3-26)

England 291 all out in 84 overs in first innings: Emilio Gay (53), Matt Fisher (50no); Matt Henry (5-80)

New Zealand 362 all out in 87.1 overs in second innings: Henry Nicholls (121), Rachin Ravindra (76), Daryl Mitchell (68); Matt Fisher (3-58), Jofra Archer (3-62)

England 182-5 in 48 overs second innings: Joe Root (75no), Harry Brook (58); Kyle Jamieson (3-37), Matt Henry (1-26)

Root England’s last hope as NZ close on victory

After Brook had dropped Daryl Mitchell when he nicked Jofra Archer’s first ball of the day behind, England got the seven wickets they needed in swift fashion.

Brook was moved to second slip after his spilled catch diving from first, and immediately atoned as centurion Henry Nicholls (121) was sent packing, having added just two to his overnight score.

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Harry Brook drops the first ball on day four, but holds on to the second attempt to take the wicket of Henry Nicholls!

Wicketkeeper Rew made amends for a spate of dropped catches on day three by snaffling a rebound that had been parried by Root at leg-slip to dismiss Tom Blundell for 16.

Archer dismissed Glenn Phillips for three to extinguish any hope of him replicating his first-innings hundred as New Zealand reached lunch on 345-6.

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Who did it better? Jason Rew recreates the iconic Geraint Jones catch

Mitchell finally fell in the second over after lunch, bowled while attempting to scoop Matt Fisher, who delivered an excellent response to being smashed down the ground by Jamieson (6) by uprooting his middle stump.

Fisher continued to mop up the New Zealand tail, with Emilio Gay taking a solid catch after Nathan Smith’s mistimed shot over midwicket, before Sonny Baker wrapped up the innings with the wicket of Henry.

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Matthew Fisher gets the wicket of Kyle Jamieson

England’s pyrrhic success with the ball presented the greater challenge of chasing down 463 which unravelled inside four overs.

Rachin Ravindra, plagued by a catalogue of drops in the series, caught Gay at midwicket to take a step towards redemption before Jamieson trapped Jacob Bethell lbw to seal a double-wicket maiden that left England 13-2.

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Emilio Gay is dismissed early in England’s second innings after Rachin Ravindra takes the catch

England were in all sorts of trouble when Ben Duckett toe-ended Will O’Rourke to Henry at mid-on, but Root’s passing of 14,000 Test runs helped them through to tea on 54-3.

Brook and Root shifted through the gears after tea, Brook putting his foot down with 10 fours and a six to seal a blistering 33-ball half-century.

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The Oval crowd rise to their feet in appreciation for Joe Root, who reaches 14,000 Test runs in his career

Root was spared by an inside edge off the following delivery, confirmed after review, just as Henry thought he had trapped England’s captain lbw.

Henry was denied again after Root sealed his 50 with an eighth four, UltraEdge coming to Brook’s rescue as he was spared after being given out lbw.

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Brook is dismissed after finding the outside edge from Matt Henry

It was third time lucky for Henry, whose perseverance and discipline with the ball paid off as Brook edged behind to Mitchell, bringing his blistering innings to an end, with Jamieson later picking up Rew’s wicket to all but end England’s hopes.

Athers: Root gives England smidgeon of hope

Sky Sports Cricket’s Michael Atherton:

“New Zealand have a quality attack. We saw that at Lord’s, albeit on a much more helpful pitch.

“They’ve got four seamers who keep coming and give you very little. You’ve got to work hard and fight hard for your runs.

“I can’t really see a way out of this for England, but those who have tickets are lucky that England’s best [Root] is still at the crease.

“There’s just a smidgeon of hope there, maybe.”

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Ben Stokes reached 95 runs from 118 balls for Durham against Northamptonshire.

Jamieson calls on New Zealand to stay ‘ruthless’

New Zealand seamer Kyle Jamieson, speaking to Sky Sports Cricket:

“It’s certainly nicer to have them five down than four down. It was a nice one to grab at the end of the day and it sets us up well for tomorrow.

“Tom [Latham] was asking if I thought it was straight. I said it was definitely straight, it was just whether it was umpire’s call on height – lucky it kept low and I managed to grab that one.

“We’ve just got to try and stay patient tomorrow, stay ruthless. Whether it comes quick or in the last over of the day, we’ve got to make sure we’re there.”

England vs New Zealand – results and schedule

All times UK and Ireland, all games live on Sky Sports

  • First Test (Lord’s) – England won by 115 runs
  • Second Test (The Kia Oval) – June 17-21 (11am)
  • Third Test (Trent Bridge) – June 25-29 (11am)

Watch the day five of the second Test between England and New Zealand live on Sky Sports Cricket on Sunday from 10am (first ball 11am).

England’s hopes of avoiding defeat in the second Test rest on the shoulders of stand-in captain Joe Root, with New Zealand closing in on a series-levelling victory at The Kia Oval.

On the day he became the second player in history to reach 14,000 Test runs, Root (75 not out) saw England through to stumps on 182-5 alongside Jordan Cox – who is yet to score – with the hosts 281 runs away from an improbable victory.

Early wickets looked to have hampered an already daunting record chase of 463 before Harry Brook (58 off 54) and Root posted half-centuries after tea in a stand of 97 for the third wicket that had England daring to dream.

But the Black Caps landed telling blows in a captivating evening session, with Matt Henry dismissing Brook after he and Root had been spared by technology, before James Rew (15) fell lbw to Kyle Jamieson (3-37) following a superb review.

The odds remain stacked against England, with New Zealand just five wickets from victory, but with Root at the crease, hope – however slim – remains that the unlikeliest of results is still possible.

Score summary – England vs New Zealand, second Test, The Kia Oval

New Zealand 391 all out in 96.2 overs in first innings (put in to bat): Glenn Phillips (100), Tom Blundell (51); Jacob Bethell (3-26)

England 291 all out in 84 overs in first innings: Emilio Gay (53), Matt Fisher (50no); Matt Henry (5-80)

New Zealand 362 all out in 87.1 overs in second innings: Henry Nicholls (121), Rachin Ravindra (76), Daryl Mitchell (68); Matt Fisher (3-58), Jofra Archer (3-62)

England 182-5 in 48 overs second innings: Joe Root (75no), Harry Brook (58); Kyle Jamieson (3-37), Matt Henry (1-26)

Root England’s last hope as NZ close on victory

After Brook had dropped Daryl Mitchell when he nicked Jofra Archer’s first ball of the day behind, England got the seven wickets they needed in swift fashion.

Brook was moved to second slip after his spilled catch diving from first, and immediately atoned as centurion Henry Nicholls (121) was sent packing, having added just two to his overnight score.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Harry Brook drops the first ball on day four, but holds on to the second attempt to take the wicket of Henry Nicholls!

Wicketkeeper Rew made amends for a spate of dropped catches on day three by snaffling a rebound that had been parried by Root at leg-slip to dismiss Tom Blundell for 16.

Archer dismissed Glenn Phillips for three to extinguish any hope of him replicating his first-innings hundred as New Zealand reached lunch on 345-6.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Who did it better? Jason Rew recreates the iconic Geraint Jones catch

Mitchell finally fell in the second over after lunch, bowled while attempting to scoop Matt Fisher, who delivered an excellent response to being smashed down the ground by Jamieson (6) by uprooting his middle stump.

Fisher continued to mop up the New Zealand tail, with Emilio Gay taking a solid catch after Nathan Smith’s mistimed shot over midwicket, before Sonny Baker wrapped up the innings with the wicket of Henry.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Matthew Fisher gets the wicket of Kyle Jamieson

England’s pyrrhic success with the ball presented the greater challenge of chasing down 463 which unravelled inside four overs.

Rachin Ravindra, plagued by a catalogue of drops in the series, caught Gay at midwicket to take a step towards redemption before Jamieson trapped Jacob Bethell lbw to seal a double-wicket maiden that left England 13-2.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Emilio Gay is dismissed early in England’s second innings after Rachin Ravindra takes the catch

England were in all sorts of trouble when Ben Duckett toe-ended Will O’Rourke to Henry at mid-on, but Root’s passing of 14,000 Test runs helped them through to tea on 54-3.

Brook and Root shifted through the gears after tea, Brook putting his foot down with 10 fours and a six to seal a blistering 33-ball half-century.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

The Oval crowd rise to their feet in appreciation for Joe Root, who reaches 14,000 Test runs in his career

Root was spared by an inside edge off the following delivery, confirmed after review, just as Henry thought he had trapped England’s captain lbw.

Henry was denied again after Root sealed his 50 with an eighth four, UltraEdge coming to Brook’s rescue as he was spared after being given out lbw.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Brook is dismissed after finding the outside edge from Matt Henry

It was third time lucky for Henry, whose perseverance and discipline with the ball paid off as Brook edged behind to Mitchell, bringing his blistering innings to an end, with Jamieson later picking up Rew’s wicket to all but end England’s hopes.

Athers: Root gives England smidgeon of hope

Sky Sports Cricket’s Michael Atherton:

“New Zealand have a quality attack. We saw that at Lord’s, albeit on a much more helpful pitch.

“They’ve got four seamers who keep coming and give you very little. You’ve got to work hard and fight hard for your runs.

“I can’t really see a way out of this for England, but those who have tickets are lucky that England’s best [Root] is still at the crease.

“There’s just a smidgeon of hope there, maybe.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Ben Stokes reached 95 runs from 118 balls for Durham against Northamptonshire.

Jamieson calls on New Zealand to stay ‘ruthless’

New Zealand seamer Kyle Jamieson, speaking to Sky Sports Cricket:

“It’s certainly nicer to have them five down than four down. It was a nice one to grab at the end of the day and it sets us up well for tomorrow.

“Tom [Latham] was asking if I thought it was straight. I said it was definitely straight, it was just whether it was umpire’s call on height – lucky it kept low and I managed to grab that one.

“We’ve just got to try and stay patient tomorrow, stay ruthless. Whether it comes quick or in the last over of the day, we’ve got to make sure we’re there.”

England vs New Zealand – results and schedule

All times UK and Ireland, all games live on Sky Sports

  • First Test (Lord’s) – England won by 115 runs
  • Second Test (The Kia Oval) – June 17-21 (11am)
  • Third Test (Trent Bridge) – June 25-29 (11am)

Watch the day five of the second Test between England and New Zealand live on Sky Sports Cricket on Sunday from 10am (first ball 11am).

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📅 Fecha Original: 2026-06-20 17:30:00
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